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Chapter 21: Metamorphism

Chapter 21: Metamorphism. Rocks as chemical systems (Ch. 5) ® a particular assemblage of coexisting phases (thermodynamic equilibrium and the phase rule) A basaltic composition can be either: Melt Cpx + plag (  olivine, ilmenite…)

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Chapter 21: Metamorphism

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  1. Chapter 21: Metamorphism • Rocks as chemical systems (Ch. 5) • ® a particular assemblage of coexisting phases (thermodynamic equilibrium and the phase rule) • A basaltic composition can be either: • Melt • Cpx + plag ( olivine, ilmenite…) • Or any combination of melt + minerals along the liquid line of descent • If uplifted and eroded  surface, will weather  a combinations of clays, oxides…

  2. Chapter 21: Metamorphism • The IUGS-SCMR has proposed the following definition of metamorphism: • “Metamorphism is a subsolidus process leading to changes in mineralogy and/or texture (for example grain size) and often in chemical composition in a rock. These changes are due to physical and/or chemical conditions that differ from those normally occurring at the surface of planets and in zones of cementation and diagenesis below this surface. They may coexist with partial melting.”

  3. The Limits of Metamorphism • Low-temperature limit grades into diagenesis • The boundary is somewhat arbitrary • Diagenetic/weathering processes are indistinguishable from metamorphic • Metamorphism begins in the range of 100-150oC for the more unstable types of protolith • Some zeolites are considered diagenetic and others metamorphic – pretty arbitrary

  4. The Limits of Metamorphism • High-temperature limit grades into melting • Over the melting range solids and liquids coexist • If we heat a metamorphic rock until it melts, at what point in the melting process does it become “igneous”? • Xenoliths, restites, and other enclaves are considered part of the igneous realm because melt is dominant, but the distinction is certainly vague and disputable • Migmatites (“mixed rocks”) are gradational

  5. Metamorphic Agents and Changes • Temperature: typically the most important factor in metamorphism Figure 1-9. Estimated ranges of oceanic and continental steady-state geotherms to a depth of 100 km using upper and lower limits based on heat flows measured near the surface. After Sclater et al. (1980), Earth. Rev. Geophys. Space Sci., 18, 269-311.

  6. Metamorphic Agents and Changes Increasing temperature has several effects 1) Promotes recrystallization increased grain size • Larger surface/volume ratio of a mineral  lower stability • Increasing temperature eventually overcomes kinetic barriers to recrystallization, and fine aggregates coalesce to larger grains

  7. Metamorphic Agents and Changes Increasing temperature has several effects 2) Drive reactions that consume unstable mineral(s) and produces new minerals that are stable under the new conditions 3) Overcomes kinetic barriers that might otherwise preclude the attainment of equilibrium

  8. Metamorphic Agents and Changes • Pressure • “Normal” gradients may be perturbed in several ways, typically: • High T/P geotherms in areas of plutonic activity or rifting • Low T/P geotherms in subduction zones

  9. Figure 21-1. Metamorphic field gradients (estimated P-T conditions along surface traverses directly up metamorphic grade) for several metamorphic areas. After Turner (1981). Metamorphic Petrology: Mineralogical, Field, and Tectonic Aspects. McGraw-Hill.

  10. Metamorphic Agents and Changes • Metamorphic grade: a general increase in degree of metamorphism without specifying the exact relationship between temperature and pressure

  11. Metamorphic Agents and Changes • Lithostatic pressure is uniform stress (hydrostatic) • Deviatoric stress = unequal pressure in different directions • Deviatoric stress can be resolved into three mutually perpendicular stress (s) components: s1 is the maximum principal stress s2 is an intermediate principal stress s3 is the minimum principal stress • In hydrostatic situations all three are equal

  12. Metamorphic Agents and Changes • Stress is an applied force acting on a rock (over a particular cross-sectional area) • Strain is the response of the rock to an applied stress (= yielding or deformation) • Deviatoric stress affects the textures and structures, but not the equilibrium mineral assemblage • Strain energy may overcome kinetic barriers to reactions

  13. Metamorphic Agents and Changes Deviatoric stresses come in three principal types: • Tension • Compression • Shear

  14. Tension:s3 is negative, and the resulting strain is extension, or pulling apart strain ellipsoid original shape s1 s3 Figure 21-2. The three main types of deviatoric stress with an example of possible resulting structures. a. Tension, in which one stress in negative. “Tension fractures” may open normal to the extension direction and become filled with mineral precipitates. Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.

  15. Compression:s1 is dominant,  folding or more homogenous flattening s3 s1 Figure 21-2. The three main types of deviatoric stress with an example of possible resulting structures. b. Compression, causing flattening or folding. Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.

  16. s1 • Foliation is a common result, which allows us to estimate the orientation of s1 • s1 > s2 = s3  foliation and no lineation • s1 = s2 > s3  lineation and no foliation • s1 > s2 > s3  both foliation and lineation Figure 21-3. Flattening of a ductile homogeneous sphere (a) containing randomly oriented flat disks or flakes. In (b), the matrix flows with progressive flattening, and the flakes are rotated toward parallelism normal to the predominant stress. Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.

  17. Metamorphic Agents and Changes Shear motion occurs along planes at an angle to s1 s1 Figure 21-2. The three main types of deviatoric stress with an example of possible resulting structures. b. Shear, causing slip along parallel planes and rotation. Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.

  18. Metamorphic Agents and Changes Fluids Evidence for the existence of a metamorphic fluid: • Fluid inclusions • Fluids are required for hydrous or carbonate phases • Volatile-involving reactions occur at temperatures and pressures that require finite fluid pressures

  19. Metamorphic Agents and Changes • Pfluid indicates the total fluid pressure, which is the sum of the partial pressures of each component (Pfluid = pH2O + pCO2 + …) • May also consider the mole fractions of the components, which must sum to 1.0 (XH2O + XCO2 + … = 1.0)

  20. Metamorphic Agents and Changes • Gradients in T, P, Xfluid across an area • Zonation in the mineral assemblages

  21. The Types of Metamorphism Different approaches to classification 1. Based on principal process or agent • Dynamic Metamorphism • Thermal Metamorphism • Dynamo-thermal Metamorphism

  22. The Types of Metamorphism Different approaches to classification 2. Based on setting • Contact Metamorphism • Pyrometamorphism • Regional Metamorphism • Orogenic Metamorphism • Burial Metamorphism • Ocean Floor Metamorphism • Hydrothermal Metamorphism • Fault-Zone Metamorphism • Impact or ShockMetamorphism

  23. Contact Metamorphism • Adjacent to igneous intrusions • Result of thermal (and possibly metasomatic) effects of hot magma intruding cooler shallow rocks • Occur over a wide range of pressures, including very low • Contact aureole

  24. The Types of Metamorphism Contact Metamorphism The size and shape of an aureole is controlled by: • The nature of the pluton • Size • Shape • Orientation • Temperature • Composition • The nature of the country rocks • Composition • Depth and metamorphic grade prior to intrusion • Permeability

  25. The Types of Metamorphism Contact Metamorphism Most easily recognized where a pluton is introduced into shallow rocks in a static environment • The rocks near the pluton are often high-grade rocks with an isotropic fabric: hornfelses (or granofelses) in which relict textures and structures are common

  26. The Types of Metamorphism Contact Metamorphism Polymetamorphic rocks are common, usually representing an orogenic event followed by a contact one • Spotted phyllite (or slate) • Overprint may be due to: • Lag time between the creation of the magma at depth during T maximum, and its migration to the lower grade rocks above • Plutonism may reflect a separate phase of post-orogenic collapse magmatism (Chapter 18)

  27. The Types of Metamorphism Pyrometamorphism Very high temperatures at very low pressures, generated by a volcanic or subvolcanic body Also developed in xenoliths

  28. The Types of Metamorphism Regional Metamorphism sensu lato: metamorphism that affects a large body of rock, and thus covers a great lateral extent Three principal types: • Orogenic metamorphism • Burial metamorphism • Ocean-floor metamorphism

  29. The Types of Metamorphism Orogenic Metamorphism is the type of metamorphism associated with convergent plate margins • Dynamo-thermal, involving one or more episodes of orogeny with combined elevated geothermal gradients and deformation (deviatoric stress) • Foliated rocks are a characteristic product

  30. The Types of Metamorphism Orogenic Metamorphism Figure 21-6. Schematic model for the sequential (a  c) development of a “Cordilleran-type” or active continental margin orogen. The dashed and black layers on the right represent the basaltic and gabbroic layers of the oceanic crust. From Dewey and Bird (1970) J. Geophys. Res., 75, 2625-2647; and Miyashiro et al. (1979) Orogeny. John Wiley & Sons.

  31. The Types of Metamorphism Orogenic Metamorphism • Uplift and erosion • Metamorphism often continues after major deformation ceases • Metamorphic pattern is simpler than the structural one • Pattern of increasing metamorphic grade from both directions toward the core area

  32. The Types of Metamorphism Orogenic Metamorphism • Most orogenic belts have several episodes of deformation and metamorphism, creating a more complex polymetamorphic pattern • Continental collision

  33. The Types of Metamorphism Orogenic Metamorphism • Batholiths are usually present in the highest grade areas • If plentiful and closely spaced, may be called regional contact metamorphism

  34. The Types of Metamorphism Burial metamorphism = for low-grade metamorphism in sedimentary basins due to burial • Southland Syncline in New Zealand: a thick pile (> 10 km) of Mesozoic volcaniclastics had accumulated • Mild deformation and no igneous intrusions discovered • Fine-grained, high-temperature phases, glassy ash: very susceptible to metamorphic alteration • Metamorphic effects attributed to increased pressure and temperature due to burial • Range from diagenesis to the formation of zeolites, prehnite, pumpellyite, laumontite, etc.

  35. The Types of Metamorphism • Coombs (1961) also proposed hydrothermal metamorphism, caused by hot H2O-rich fluids and usually involving metasomatism • Difficult type of metamorphism to constrain, since hydrothermal effects often play some role in most of the other types of metamorphism

  36. The Types of Metamorphism Burial metamorphism occurs in areas that have not experienced significant deformation or orogeny • Restricted to large, relatively undisturbed sedimentary piles away from active plate margins • The Gulf of Mexico? • Bengal Fan?

  37. The Types of Metamorphism Burial Metamorphism • Bengal Fan  sedimentary pile > 22 km • Extrapolating  250-300oC at the base (P ~ 0.6 GPa) • Well into the metamorphic range, and the weight of the overlying sediments sufficient to  impart a foliation at depth • Passive margins often become active • Areas of burial metamorphism may thus become areas of orogenic metamorphism

  38. The Types of Metamorphism Ocean-Floor Metamorphism affects the oceanic crust at ocean ridge spreading centers • Wide range of temperatures at relatively low pressure • Metamorphic rocks exhibit considerable metasomatic alteration, notably loss of Ca and Si and gain of Mg and Na • These changes can be correlated with exchange between basalt and hot seawater

  39. The Types of Metamorphism Ocean-Floor Metamorphism • May be considered another example of hydrothermal metamorphism • Highly altered chlorite-quartz rocks- distinctive high-Mg, low-Ca composition

  40. The Types of Metamorphism Fault-Zone and Impact Metamorphism occur in areas experiencing relatively high rates of deform-ation and strain with only minor recrystallization • Impact metamorphism (“shock metamorphism”) occurs at meteorite (or other bolide) impact craters • Both fault-zone and impact metamorphism correlate with dynamic metamorphism, based on process

  41. (a) Shallow fault zone with fault breccia (b) Slightly deeper fault zone (exposed by erosion) with some ductile flow and fault mylonite Figure 21-7. Schematic cross section across fault zones. After Mason (1978) Petrology of the Metamorphic Rocks. George Allen & Unwin. London.

  42. The Progressive Nature of Metamorphism • Prograde: increase in metamorphic grade with time as a rock is subjected to gradually more severe conditions • Progrademetamorphism: changes in a rock that accompany increasing metamorphic grade • Retrograde: decreasing grade as rock cools and recovers from a metamorphic or igneous event • Retrograde metamorphism: any accompanying changes

  43. The Progressive Nature of Metamorphism • A rock at a high metamorphic grade probably progressed through a sequence of mineral assemblages rather than hopping directly from an unmetamorphosed rock to the metamorphic rock that we find today

  44. The Progressive Nature of Metamorphism All rocks that we now find must also have cooled to surface conditions At what point on its cyclic P-T-t path did its present mineral assemblage last equilibrate? • The preserved zonal distribution of metamorphic rocks suggests that each rock preserves the conditions of the maximum metamorphic grade (temperature)

  45. The Progressive Nature of Metamorphism Retrograde metamorphism is of only minor significance • Prograde reactions are endothermic and easily driven by increasing T • Devolatilization reactions are easier than reintroducing the volatiles • Geothermometry indicates that the mineral compositions commonly preserve the maximum temperature

  46. Types of Protolith Lump the common types of sedimentary and igneous rocks into six chemically based-groups 1. Ultramafic - very high Mg, Fe, Ni, Cr 2. Mafic - high Fe, Mg, and Ca 3. Shales (pelitic) - high Al, K, Si 4. Carbonates- high Ca, Mg, CO2 5. Quartz- nearly pure SiO2. 6. Quartzo-feldspathic - high Si, Na, K, Al

  47. Some Examples of Metamorphism • Interpretation of the conditions and evolution of metamorphic bodies, mountain belts, and ultimately the evolution of the Earth's crust • Metamorphic rocks may retain enough inherited information from their protolith to allow us to interpret much of the pre-metamorphic history as well

  48. Orogenic Regional Metamorphism of the Scottish Highlands • George Barrow (1893, 1912) • SE Highlands of Scotland - Caledonian orogeny ~ 500 Ma • Nappes • Granites

  49. Barrow’s Area Figure 21-8. Regional metamorphic map of the Scottish Highlands, showing the zones of minerals that develop with increasing metamorphic grade. From Gillen (1982) Metamorphic Geology. An Introduction to Tectonic and Metamorphic Processes. George Allen & Unwin. London.

  50. Orogenic Regional Metamorphism of the Scottish Highlands • Barrow studied the pelitic rocks • Could subdivide the area into a series of metamorphic zones, each based on the appearance of a new mineral as metamorphic grade increased

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